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[J6I]≫ PDF BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books

BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books



Download As PDF : BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books

Download PDF BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books

Truckee … you can call him Truck. A mixed-blood native man on the road to visit his spirit heritage in the Wheeler Peak range in Nevada. A man who’s been bludgeoned by life, judging by the look of his craggy features and in-your-face attitude. The world hasn’t handed Truck any breaks. The only man besides his father he has ever loved was killed in Iraq, now only a memory that eats at his gut. His wind spirit, born of his Paiute heritage, drives the wilderness images he pens and draws for a living. And then one day, hitching a ride on the Loneliest Road in America, he accepts a lift from a good looking, arrogant man named Dominic Majors. Call him Dom. A man who lives up to his name… Running from a lifestyle that is sucking his soul for no emotional gain, Dom thinks he can find a kind of salvation in his work for the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, helping to save the desert bighorn. At the end of a trail, literally as well as emotionally, he sees a hitchhiker with impossibly broad shoulders and an improbable black suit on a lonely road to nowhere. Curious, needing a companion for the long trail ahead, he stops for the giant man with an even bigger ’tude. And so begins the ride of their lives.

BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books

This is a very difficult review to write. Not because I didn't enjoy the book (I did) or it's not well-written (it is). Because I'm totally bowled over by the fierce astringent beauty of it: the characters, the setting, the story. This book has moved me in the depths of my hidden secret self, the one I don't even show to ME most of the time. The story of these two men is sacred; it is holy: I fear to touch it with my mortal words.

But I will try.

Nya Rawlins and Erin O'Quinn have teamed up for the first time; I beg the wind spirit that it will not be the last. Each is a stunning writer on her own; together they are the reflection in the eye of the eagle: perfect, sublime, riding the current of their words to show us the world spread in beauty beneath them.

The story is set in Nevada, Erin's home state, and her attachment to the very soil of the place illuminates the book as the full moon illuminates the night. She knows the bones of Nevada, the bones of earth and stone and sage and stream. Through her eyes, we see this land of welcomed solitude, where each bit of life takes on meaning in ways it cannot in the midst of noisy invasive knots of harried people. She and Nya both have a deep respect for the purity of Native American thought, and song, and practice, and that's readily apparent here.

It would have been simple to write a cliched romance, one partner being a sort of Native American paperdoll paraded across a poorly plotted stage into the arms of a white man. There isn't a puff of a breath of that in this book. Truckee, the Native American, loves his heritage, his birthright, and expresses that love in poem and in art. He's quiet, contained, respectful, humble: all things one would expect from a Native American. Part of what makes him so very much more than a cliché is his relationship with Dominic.

Dominic is a federal research specialist, with a twist. He's studying the poaching of big game animals (specifically, bighorn sheep), and he has the firepower and know-how to put a stop to the horror that is exploitation for profit.

The two meet when Dom, on a whim, picks Truckee up as he's hitching toward his summer living quarters. Each man is laconic; each carries an emotional burden he needs to drop; each desires the other. But Dom isn't just short for Dominic; this man is a dominant, has delved into the world of big city BDSM clubs, has taken subs and then dropped them. Truck's heart has a gash in it, torn by his Eric's combat death. Can these two find a way to bring Dom's practices into Truck's life of seeking the wind spirit within him? Nya and Erin answer that question in this masterful banquet of imagery and action.

If Amazon allowed, I wouldn't rate this five stars; I'd rate it the entire Milky Way.

Product details

  • Series Wilderness Trail
  • Paperback 190 pages
  • Publisher CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (August 5, 2013)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1491292881

Read BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books

Tags : BIGHORN (A Wilderness Trail Novel) [Erin O'Quinn, Nya Rawlyns] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Truckee … you can call him Truck. A mixed-blood native man on the road to visit his spirit heritage in the Wheeler Peak range in Nevada. A man who’s been bludgeoned by life,Erin O'Quinn, Nya Rawlyns,BIGHORN (A Wilderness Trail Novel),CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform,1491292881,Fiction Gay
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BIGHORN A Wilderness Trail Novel Erin O'Quinn Nya Rawlyns 9781491292884 Books Reviews


This wonderful story, which reads like a lovesong of understanding, angst and joy, spun me on my tail and then some. The language is like fine liquor on the tongue if you are a drinker, the sweetest of desserts if you are a foodie. Whatever your passion, I'm sure you will find it within these pages, for this is a story of passion and soul and the trust it takes to find and hold both. It is a simple tale of man meeting mate, but often the simple appears complex until you unlock it and Erin O'Quinn and Nya Rawlyns supply a most exquisite key.

Dominic Majors is a loner, a bit of a control addict, and fiercely protective of his ideals, which center on tracking and protecting Mother Nature from those who tend to harm her. He's a federal specialist researcher in the employment of the US Field and Wildlife services and he goes where he is needed to accomplish his job. After recuperating from an "incident" at his last designation, he's been assigned to Nevada to check out the big horn sheep population, seems there might be some poaching going down. Loath to admit it, he's seething, spoiling for a fight even. The combination of the "incident" plus the loss of his young lover, to the opposing team no less, is messing with his mind and has him shoring up his argument that he doesn't need anyone. He's on the long, dusty trail to his destination venting and fantasizing about quitting and becoming a mountain man when he spots an odd hitchhiker whose mood seems to match his own.

Paiute Indian, Truckee, is en route to see his cousin, through the courtesy of strangers; or those drivers who are willing to pick up a six-foot-three hitchhiker dressed in a black suit and a red bandana. While the journey, not the destination, is generally the thing to Truckee, his time between rides on the hot, dusty road is giving his mind over to playing with memories best laid to rest. Dreams like, what if his one and only lover hadn't been killed in Iraq five years earlier? And hell, could he call the man a lover given the too few/too fast encounters between the two of them? No, the past is best left in the past, he should focus on his present, on his fell-into-his-lap source of income, the selling of his poetry and sketches; the beauty of the wilderness of nature that he pens. When a ride finally stops, Truckee climbs in, and both men discover you are truly only as alone as you want to be.

I cannot possibly hope to do justice to the beauty that is this story. Should I say I am a Native American who doesn't particularly like reading stories with Native Americans in them? Should I say I generally like my heroes younger than the thirty-eight of these leads? Dare I say I'm an arrogant loner myself, so yeah, not particular to stories of like ilk. I could say all of that, but what I'll say instead is that the story had me by the fifth paragraph and wouldn't let me go.

This is a riveting, sensual journey into the hearts of two strong-willed, unforgiving men, who find support in facing their own fears, desires, and realities, by finding each other. Is it hot? Damn sure is... Hot, steamy, provocative, and brilliantly original. I felt for these men, I yearned when they yearned, I ached when they ached, and I even cried...for the beauty of choice words strung together to form evocative imagery and feeling. I hesitate to say this, but for me, this is the book Brokeback Mountain should have been.

Thank you, Erin O'Quinn and Nya Rawlyns, for this rare and superb story of two fractured men becoming one whole soul. "Sensual, Provocative, Raw, Beauty"
In their first foray writing together, these ladies have knocked it out of the park. The book is so masculine and oozes so much testosterone that my tablet was on fire. The story flowed and was superb. This is a romance novel, yes, but not one of regular 'sappy' ones. It has bite, charisma, and humor. I'm looking forward to the next project that these two work on together. I enjoy both authors separately but together...their work is DYNAMITE!!!
This is a very difficult review to write. Not because I didn't enjoy the book (I did) or it's not well-written (it is). Because I'm totally bowled over by the fierce astringent beauty of it the characters, the setting, the story. This book has moved me in the depths of my hidden secret self, the one I don't even show to ME most of the time. The story of these two men is sacred; it is holy I fear to touch it with my mortal words.

But I will try.

Nya Rawlins and Erin O'Quinn have teamed up for the first time; I beg the wind spirit that it will not be the last. Each is a stunning writer on her own; together they are the reflection in the eye of the eagle perfect, sublime, riding the current of their words to show us the world spread in beauty beneath them.

The story is set in Nevada, Erin's home state, and her attachment to the very soil of the place illuminates the book as the full moon illuminates the night. She knows the bones of Nevada, the bones of earth and stone and sage and stream. Through her eyes, we see this land of welcomed solitude, where each bit of life takes on meaning in ways it cannot in the midst of noisy invasive knots of harried people. She and Nya both have a deep respect for the purity of Native American thought, and song, and practice, and that's readily apparent here.

It would have been simple to write a cliched romance, one partner being a sort of Native American paperdoll paraded across a poorly plotted stage into the arms of a white man. There isn't a puff of a breath of that in this book. Truckee, the Native American, loves his heritage, his birthright, and expresses that love in poem and in art. He's quiet, contained, respectful, humble all things one would expect from a Native American. Part of what makes him so very much more than a cliché is his relationship with Dominic.

Dominic is a federal research specialist, with a twist. He's studying the poaching of big game animals (specifically, bighorn sheep), and he has the firepower and know-how to put a stop to the horror that is exploitation for profit.

The two meet when Dom, on a whim, picks Truckee up as he's hitching toward his summer living quarters. Each man is laconic; each carries an emotional burden he needs to drop; each desires the other. But Dom isn't just short for Dominic; this man is a dominant, has delved into the world of big city BDSM clubs, has taken subs and then dropped them. Truck's heart has a gash in it, torn by his Eric's combat death. Can these two find a way to bring Dom's practices into Truck's life of seeking the wind spirit within him? Nya and Erin answer that question in this masterful banquet of imagery and action.

If allowed, I wouldn't rate this five stars; I'd rate it the entire Milky Way.
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